Activity Listings
- Letter from Alden H. Emery, Executive Secretary, to LP. RE: Informs him that a matter came up in regards to the Fulbright Fellowships. Informs him of the men on the Screening Committee. Would like to have his endorsement. [Filed under LP Science: American Chemical Society: Correspondence, 1949-1950: Box #14.005 Folder #5.1]
- Letter from Ellwood C. Nance, University of Florida, to LP. RE: Further explains what they talked about on the phone that afternoon. Informs him that they are still interested in awarding him an honorary degree, and having him deliver an address at a banquet. [Filed under LP Science: American Chemical Society: Correspondence, 1949-1950: Box #14.005 Folder #5.1]
- Letter from Ing. Dr. A. Majrich to LP RE: Says he was agreeably surprised to get his reprinted articles and thinks he is right on the issues regarding Dr. Spitzer. [Filed under LP Biographical: Political Issues: Ralph Spitzer: Academic Freedom and Passport Difficulties, 1942-1994: Box #2.034, Folder 34.2]
- Letter from LP to Alden H. Emery, Executive Secretary. RE: Glad to have his letter. Agrees with appointing Smith as a representative of the ACS. [Filed under LP Science: American Chemical Society: Correspondence, 1949-1950: Box #14.005 Folder #5.1]
- Letter from LP to Dr. Arthur Hawley Parmelee. [Letter from Parmelee to LP May 20, 1949] [Filed under LP Correspondence: #312.14]
May 10, 1949
Dr. Arthur Hawley Parmalee
Children's Hospital
Los Angeles, California
Dear Dr. Parmalee:
I am writing to ask if it would be possible for you to arrange for my colleagues and me to obtain some blood from sickle cell anemia from patients at the Children's Hospital, to use in our research on this disease.
With the collaboration of Harvey Itano, M.D., and three other post-doctorate research men I have been carrying on research on sickle cell anemia during the past three years. This work is being carried on with the aid of a grant from the Public Health Service. We have discovered that the hemoglobin in the red cells of blood from sickle cell anemia patients is different from ordinary adult human hemoglobin. The difference is observed in the Tiselius apparatus in the form of a difference in the electrophoretic mobility, which also corresponds to a difference in isoelectric points. It is indicated that there are between two and four additional acidic groups on every sickle cell hemoglobin molecule, or else there are between two and four basic groups missing. We are getting reedy to carry out an amino acid analysis on the sickle cell hemoglobin in order to determine the nature of this difference in chemical composition. The hemoglobin from sickle cell anemia patients is 100% of this new type, whereas that in the red cells of sickle cell trait individuals is a mixture of sickle cell hemoglobin and normal human hemoglobin.
Our progress is now being hampered by a lack of sickle cell anemia blood. We need approximately one liter of this blood for work in the immediate future, and presumably would like to have a steady source of supply later on, amounting to a similar quantity every few months. It would be possible for us to arrange to pay for the expense involved in obtaining the blood.
I am very grateful to you for whatever assistance you can give us with this problem. We are hoping that the work will not only lead to a better understanding of this disease - this is the first time that a form of hemoglobin in human beings has been found that differs from normal human hemoglobin (except for the fetal hemoglobin that occurs in
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infants) - but also that some contribution may be made to the treatment of the disease.
Sincerely yours,
Linus Pauling
- Letter from LP to George Burch. [Letter from Burch to LP May 20, 1949] [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box #33.8, file:(Burch, George 1943, 1949-1954, 1960, 1966-1970, 1973, 1982, 1986)]
May 10, 1049
Dr. George Burch
Tulane University
Medical School
New Orleans, Louisiana
Dear Dr. Burch:
We have now got to the stage in our work of sickle cell anemia when it is important that we have a large supply of blood from sickle cell anemia patients, and we have not succeeded in making any satisfactory arrangements to collect this blood locally. I am writing to ask if you could help us with this problem.
Our program is moving along very well. We have found that the disease is due to the presence in the erythrocytes of a form of hemoglobin differing from normal adult human hemoglobin. The hemoglobin seems to contain approximately four additional acidic groups per molecule, or else it has approximately four basic groups missing. We want now to carry out analyses of the hemoglobin, in order to find exactly what the difference in the hemoglobin is. For this purpose we would like to have in the immediate future about one liter of hemoglobin from sickle cell anemia patients (not sickle cell trait), in addition to what we can obtain locally. Do you think that it would be possible for you to obtain this blood for us and to ship it to us, without too much trouble to yourself? We could pay for the special expenses involved from our Public Health Service grant in aid. The samples of blood from different patients should not be mixed, in order that we could test them individually to see whether they are sickle cell anemia samples or not. We have found that the hemoglobin from patients with sickle cell anemia is 100% of the abnormal kind, whereas that in the erythrocytes of sickle cell trait individuals is a mixture of sickle cell and normal hemoglobin. The tests of the hemoglobin are made with the Tiselius apparatus.
With best regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
Linus Pauling:shh
- Letter from LP to James Crowe, ACS News Service. RE: Thanks him for returning his notes on the talk at the Division of Chemical Education. [Filed under LP Science: American Chemical Society: Correspondence, 1949-1950: Box #14.005 Folder #5.1]
- Letter from William W. Rubey, to W. M. Latimer, University of California. RE: Inquires whether the Section of Chemistry is interested in nominating Dr. Hendricks for election to the Academy. [Filed under LP Science: National Academy of Sciences, 1945-1951: Box #14.020 Folder #20.3]
- Letter from Wm. Muenhlhause, Controller, to LP. RE: Encloses a check to cover the traveling costs of San Francisco. [Filed under LP Science: American Chemical Society: Correspondence, 1949-1950: Box #14.005 Folder #5.1]
- Newspaper Clipping: “Pauling OKs Red Teachers”, Pasadena (California) Independent, May 10, 1949. [Filed under LP Scrapbooks, 1946-1950: Box #6.005, Folder 5.44]
- Propositions Submitted by Thomas L. Allen for the PhD Oral Examination. [LP Biographical CIT: Materials re: Teaching and Advising of Graduate Students by Linus Pauling, 1935-1963: Box #1.016, Folder 16.2]
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